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elections in 3 years: Portugal’s political crisis explained
After Luís
Montenegro’s center-right government fell, voters will head back to the polls
in May.
Although
Luís Montenegro denied any conflict of interest, the opposition accused the
prime minister of indirectly enriching himself while serving atop the country's
executive branch. |
March 12,
2025 4:01 am CET
By Aitor
Hernández-Morales
https://www.politico.eu/article/portugal-elections-political-crisis-luis-montenegro-spinumviva/
For the
third time in three years, Portugal is poised to hold a snap election. POLITICO
breaks down the factors forcing voters back to the polls and what the latest
developments mean for the country’s political stability.
The
Spinumviva scandal
Following
Socialist Prime Minister António Costa’s resignation in connection with an
influence-peddling investigation in November 2023, a national election was held
in Portugal one year ago. Luís Montenegro’s Democratic Alliance coalition won
the most votes and was subsequently able to form a minority government that
seemed surprisingly durable. Indeed, after the center-right politician managed
to get his budget passed last fall, many assumed his administration would be in
power for the foreseeable future.
Earlier this
year, however, the Portuguese press began reporting on Spinumviva, a data
protection consultancy the prime minister founded in 2021. When the firm was
launched, Montenegro was an entrepreneur with no active political role, and he
transferred ownership of the company to his wife and sons the following year.
But questions were raised as to whether the center-right politician personally
benefited from the consultancy, whose clients include several companies that
have contracts with the government.
Although
Montenegro denied any conflict of interest, the opposition accused the prime
minister of indirectly enriching himself while serving atop the country’s
executive branch. The far-right Chega group and the Portuguese Communist Party
filed parliamentary censure motions against the government over the past three
weeks, both of which failed.
No
confidence
Although the
censure motions went nowhere, questions regarding Spinumviva lingered. The
tenacity of the “scandal” ultimately convinced the prime minister to submit
himself to a parliamentary vote of confidence. “The country needs political
clarification … to end the atmosphere of permanent insinuations and intrigues,”
he told lawmakers.
A majority
of those same lawmakers declined to express confidence in Montenegro on
Tuesday, automatically ending his government. President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
summoned the leaders of Portugal’s main political parties to Belém Palace and
will hold consultations with each on Wednesday; on Thursday he convened an
urgent session of the Council of State, after which he is expected to dissolve
parliament and call a snap election for either May 11 or May 18.
That means
Portugal will hold its third snap ballot in three years, and kick off an
electoral marathon: Two months after the legislative ballot, voters will be
summoned back to the polls to take part in nationwide local elections, while in
January they will be asked to choose Rebelo de Sousa’s successor as president.
Political
crisis ahead?
With this
snap election coming so soon after the previous ballot, Portugal’s political
landscape remains much as it was then. According to the latest surveys,
Montenegro’s Democratic Alliance is projected to win the most votes, narrowly
ahead of the Socialist Party. Support for Chega has fallen slightly, but the
far-right party would likely remain the third-largest group in the parliament.
But while
the distribution of votes is likely to remain largely the same among the
parties, there are fewer options for forming a stable government. Relations
last year among the groups in the parliament were largely cordial, but since
the Spinumviva scandal tensions have ratcheted up dramatically.
Montenegro
insists he will be his party’s candidate and will therefore have a very
personal stake in the election; meanwhile, Socialist Party leader Pedro Nuno
Santos will be under pressure not to lose a second electoral contest to the
center right. With both politicians blaming each other for sending the country
back to the polls, the campaign is likely to get ugly fast.
With no
faction likely to win a majority of seats in the parliament, and neither the
center left nor the center right eager to forge pragmatic agreements, Chega is
once again poised to play kingmaker. Montenegro has avoided collaborating with
the ultranationalist group, but some members of his party — such as former PM
Pedro Passos Coelho — favor coming to “an understanding” with Chega. Should the
Democratic Alliance’s current leader underperform in the upcoming election,
many will be eager to see him step aside to allow his predecessor to take the
party in another direction.
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